Animal magnetism : history of its origin, progress, and present state, its principles and secrets displayed, as delivered by the late Dr. Demainauduc : to which is added, dissertations on the dropsy, spasms, epilectic fits, St. Vitus's dance, gout, rheumatism, and consumption : with upwards of one hundred cures and cases : also, Advice to those who visit the sick, with recipes to prevent infection; a definition of sympathy, antipathy, the effects of the imagination on pregnant women, nature, history; and On the resurrection of the body / by George Winter.
- Winter, George, active 1787-1801
- Date:
- [1801]
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Animal magnetism : history of its origin, progress, and present state, its principles and secrets displayed, as delivered by the late Dr. Demainauduc : to which is added, dissertations on the dropsy, spasms, epilectic fits, St. Vitus's dance, gout, rheumatism, and consumption : with upwards of one hundred cures and cases : also, Advice to those who visit the sick, with recipes to prevent infection; a definition of sympathy, antipathy, the effects of the imagination on pregnant women, nature, history; and On the resurrection of the body / by George Winter. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by University of Bristol Library. The original may be consulted at University of Bristol Library.
![of the most celebrated Anatomists in Lon- don, for an acquirement of the knowledge of the structure of the human frame. Those regular instrudions in the different Medical Sciences were then attended to, merely for the benefit of the Author s own health, which he deemed much more valuable thm any pro- perty i]e possibly could p€)ssess. Soon after, he commenced the pradlice of physic on himself, his servants, and poor pt^ople in his neighbourhood, and for upwards of twelve years past, has apropriated certain hours \ three days in the week to attend to poor peo- ple, &c. Those who cculd afford to purchase meaicines, he prescribed for, but to poor peo- ple who could not afford, to such he gave me- dicines. From the number of patients attend- ing, his house frequently appeared more like- a hospital, than a private dwelling-house, and the great practice that he has had, in the co!irse of seventeen years, in addition to his regular medical instrucflions, enabled him to cfFc6t the cures herein inserted, (which arc only](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21445667_0014.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)